Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NA SY OORT A A emraancRNa THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, SEPT. 15, 1927 ° Are You Working With Might and Main” “Tunney Comp. $100,000 PAID NEW JERSEY LABOR OFFICIALS BY A) | EXECUTION OF SACCO AND VANZETTI PREVENTS | | for the | | | | GROUP OF OPEN SHOP EMPLOYERS TARIFF FIXING COMMISSION TO ARGENTINIA (Continu from Page One) legal action. | ; diy pum red ; RED BAZAAR | eteme haoka ae ee tee Cte a LN of this example of “W ASHINGTON Sept. 14.—A_ proposed American commission to. | ito be found. | corruption has created a sensation, | Argentine to invé gate economic factors: effecting production of flax eae | | Hilfers will be remembered as the | here, and the matter has been referred, Seed and corn, with a view to possible revision of American tariff rates we yf ' to eee {man who ‘tried to break the Passaic | to the committee on officers. on those commodities, has been abandoned at the suggestion of the Ar-| The Daily Worker and the Freiheit | | |textile’strike after accepting appoint- | One Paragraph to Passaic. | Sentine gqvernment. \ October 6-7-8-9. ‘These will be the significant days of the biggest | ment on Governor Moore’s committee; The convention was opened last| |* Alfred P. Dennis, a member of the United States Tariff Commission, | | with McBride, state labor commission- | Monday with the usual speeches and! | after conferring with President Coolidge today at thé White House, said er-and adjutant-general cf the state|capor by the mayor of the city and| | public sentiment in Argentine against the American beef tariffs and the’ militia. jother luminaries. In response to the | sacco-Vanzetti execution made the mission inadvisable at this time. “T had bigger opportunities dealing | mayor of the open-shop town, Quinn i ERE ay = 7 5 with the legislature,” he told the con-|said “organized labor seeks to pro- (Strikebreaking Acts of | vention. He said that “legislators|mote good will between capital and event of the year. Madison Square Garden will be the place for this | stupendous expression of proletarian effort and initiative. One hun- | dred thousand workers in every important city in the United States will be the army which we will mobilize for this tremendous affair. Every party unit from New York to Seattle, every working class organization sympathetic with the revolutionary movement, every ALBANY, N. Y., Sept. 14.—Har- an Kagel, 15, of Karners, is dead group of class conscious workers—on the job. must be dealt with diplomatically.” labor .the State Federation is a| Legion Hit by Workers! today, the victim of injuries received } It’s “Going in Good Shape.” bulwark against radicalism.” " —— | when run down on Schenectady Road Here's) what is nected. \| “This costs money,” He said. ‘A single paragraph in the presi-/\—(Continued from Page One) /|by an automobile said by authori NAM for the Red, Honor Roll for the beautiful illustrated | Hilfers declared that “the federa-|dent’s report is devoted to the historic | most important tasks in the past has|t® have been driven by Charles R. Souvehir Program. Collect them at one dollar a name. |tion is now going in good shape, so | Passaic strike, which credits Governor }been to act as American fascisti. | Leutz of Forest Hills, Long Island. ARTICLES for sale: art objects, clothing, shoes, raincoats, | why throw a monkey wrench into the | Moore with settling the struggle. The, “The: French workers should be} - et ee TEES women’s wear, furniture, radios, phonographs, candy, cigars, cigar- GENE TUNNEY machinery?” resolutions committee reported favor-| congratulated on the vigorous oppo- | ettes, novelties, furs, knitgoods, umbrellas, ete. Send in your bundle. ae ‘ Declaring that he would “do any-|ably on resolutions against “yellow | sition they are showing to this stri kee | 3 ADS for the Souvenir. Program at .00 per page. No working SHARING equal prominence with thing to straighten this thing out,’’| dog” contracts, and endorsed the state | breaking erew. In opposing the fas- class organization should fail to register itself in this manner, by | the report that gamblers had of- Hilfers wept as he talked to the con-| zoning amendment to the constitution. |cist convention they have the support | [. e FT WI N 5 | taking all or part of a page. No Workers Party unit should be miss- | sored Gone ant pd a a |vention about a “square deal which|’ It also declared for increases in|of all the militant and progressive ing. sey is the aes that Tunney aed | tempers justice with mercy.” compensation in the Workmen’s Com- wokkers in America.” FALL IN LINE TO MAKE THE RED BAZAAR THE BIGGEST Manager Billy Gibson had become Unmoved by his speech, delegates | pensation Act, and stated that there Wf Refused Negro Veterans. suc ee OF HE Y FAR = embroiled in a fresh outbreak of | and Board rose one after the other|were four questions of legislation of | /? william L. Patterson, President of | s F f YEAR. | their old differences and that | and charged Hilfers with violations of | paramount importance to the ee American Negro Labor Congress: mney ins erect Ona ‘The American Negro Labor Con- By DAVID J. SAPOSS HEADQUARTERS NATIONAL BAZAAR COMMITTER from the secret workouts in his | the trust placed in him by the mem-|ers of the state, namely, first, that in rious forces that are at w. in the labor movement at the 30 Union Square Ghicago camp. bers. cases of injunctions a hearing should) press regards the Afnerican Legion as 7 ae Both Reilly and Quinn openly ac-}be given both sides before court order | on a par with the Ku Klux Klan as of Brookwood Labor College AARC LSE cused Hilfers of crookedness, and |is granted; second, a bill for increased| 4 Negro-baiting organization. We g Telephone Stuyvesant 9500 | said he “stalled” until William Green, | state compensation for workers; third, | ,ye more than pleased to hear that the | Gh ae aepianl Wa es ._———_—__ = — - @ president of the A. F. of L. appointed |eight-hour day and minimum wage 0n | French Communist Party is adver-| A ritiig’ about labor prob- iy him as state organizer. state public work; four, against the tising” the fact that the American | es . han anyone Minority Conference Dangerous Flights A letter has been sent to, Green|employment of alien labor on public | tegion has refused in many, of their | in the ap ation of the asking that efforts be made to recover | work, and enforcing the law of 1919. | posts to accept Negro veterans as the missing books and that the A. F. it is expected that the convention |}, ombers,” ) Ay ne da meseent ae ee of L. make good on Hilfers’ bond thru will adjourn tomorrow. Supp rae fiGov. Waller: with Prof sor Commons for ——————— = — Saenger ya <7 Rose Baron, secretary, Internation- “ “| al Labor Defense: “The splendid ex- bor | Where Is the Cheek. | Fes of the American Legion now sven “4 : : a 'Book” is the Slogan at being eonducted by the French Com- | Rania EHOTER noe prac | 1 . munist Party’s official organ, L’Hu- the origin and development of ‘the Jersey Convention ;manite, is something that all militant | the Left Wing Movement al Five Meetin 8 ‘mong the trade unions. 3or= | g | CAMDEN, N. workers of America can most heart- | ing from withi | J., Sept. 14.—The | | see ily endorse. tion, dual unionism, tears of Henry F. Hilfers, former) “wwe jn America; aseillonch toncet tionary and opportunistic g . a e Fae dan elas: sal their LO eas nthe atte ay cra-' that the American Legion in addi- took the place of organize the unor- ganization, has done its PEE to tive In the -labpr movement WILKES-BARRE, Pa., Sept: 14-+|ganized as a slogan at the convention support Gov. Fuller in his murder of gould ile tiat al ‘ without this War on the blackleg Trade Union| have given up the attempt until next |J. Louis Engdahl, editor of The|of New Jersey labor at Camden to- er low workers, Sacco and Van- | mentary material and tel Bill, a defense corp unity of | spring, it was announced today that | | DAILY WORKER, will speak at five | day. ao at Ee nkO ee eb lis wert tidene, te have the British and Russian masses, work-|two twin-motored hydroplanes will JACK DELANEY (above) and | meetings in the anthracite field start- | ay the French workers continue | Urges Fight on Plan Still Proposed in For War an U. §.5.R. Europe and America LONDON, y I “We must BERLIN, Sept. 14.—In spite of the | face death £ for the | death toll which the winds and weath- | capitalist c¢ the -\er have rolled up against aerial ad- note of the fourt conference | venturers this year, rman _ pilots of the National Movement | will once more try their luck in er which was opened by Tom -Mann in| ing the Atlantic before winter sets Battersea Town Hall. | While all the other ocean flye ence volume. “Honest Henry” had been called/ The Seamen's ittees, 2 ghting p ar Johnny Risko swapped punches |; : their campaign. We on this side of } Journal wrote Fee rnmalttees ae lee eo as % i Cleveland’ Wednesday night. ee Sy pieenpon, Sen Sean | UP to be honest and tell what he| she Atiantie are mipuerime than tt the followin icy—these wi led for by the 7 i emer | ston, 2 ck, did with the money that had come his 4 oa 2 Shout lef militant delegates from all over the | Detroiters Undecided. in the evening at Old Forge. |the utmost.” ing Unionism”: way in a big way during his reign. book pre- country representing many indust TOKYO, Sept. 14—Although sii | Keep Up the Sustaining Fund|” yonday night, his meeting will be| Not that the conventin would have| ,_C: 2: Miller, president of the Amer-| aes Many Industries Represented. oping to n the dangerous flight |at. Nanticoke; Tuesday night at Dun-|heen militant had “Honest Henry” ‘4 Association of Plumbers’ Help-| ep Side by e sat Durham mi cross the Pacifie, Edward E. Schlee | U. S. Threatens ei |more, and Wednesday night at Lu-|not shed tears in self pity. Had °TS:, “The history of the American) workers, and repre-| said today that difficulties apparently | ~ *>* 2 s For S11 | Jarne.. The, Lmeeins necting wie eae cates Dh Legion, the American fascisti, is a aisn usually sed with- building tr * * “Honest Henry” not taken nice clean} };.;,.. Pete ; Peon e 0 h considera fr sentatives from the Co-operative |make the flight impossible. Born Miner Pickets neta at the Italian Hall on Oliver Bt | orey oak aie i eka, banka history of strikebreaking, anti-labor the mind. ae tbs Veneers Guilds. 4 iE Because supplies have failed to ‘and will be for the purpose of launch- | % and open shop activity. labor because it makes and public service corporations of “Systematic arrangements are now |reach Midway Island, the next pro- |. (Continued from Page One) ing a drive for the organization of a|the entire east (as he admits he did) “The legion is a tool in the hands | William %. Foster says of yeing made for a new world war, in; posed hop in the flight of the Pride |1e¢S of challenges: the miners must | DAILY WORKER Builders’ Club in| and had “Honest Henry” prddeele the exploiters of labor. Thru in-| th book: “very militant > unionist should own a of Saposs’ ‘Left Wing ollow this ad- which the leader is the British gov-|of Detroit around-the-world, and be- | disregard the injunctions. They must | the anthra¢ite coal field. ernment,” charged Tom Mann. “The genious propaganda they attract | )thousands of workers, ex-service men | his check book to prove who profited ause of adverse weather condition, ,@o as the needle trades workers of | The meetings at Pittston, Nanticoke, |}y these aanation from be See ect is to bring about a general on- | Schlee asserted continuation of the | Chicago and New York “haye done; | Old Forge and Dunmore will be-Sacco- |jabor,” Passaic would still have been | #24 prepare their minds for the next | yess secure a copy of the laught against. t flight was improbable, although he | organize mass picket lines and dare | Vanzetti memorial meetings, played up small. | slaughter. 7 | a Ms 4,say we must resist this and m fixed Friday evening as the starting | the courts and the national guard to eens | Whi Aicat. Passaic “The stand of the ‘generals’ of the | ROT. obs et ee. be prepared to face death in re | time in the event that he and William | take action. They must immediately Keep Up the Sustaining Fund) — me Bik oe _,. American Legion on the matter of | ne. Brock, pilot of the plane, decided to|call relief conferences, for only in| & | For the Passaic struggle was big,|Sacco and Vanzetti is a symbol of | READ ALSO Fight War on Soviet Union. go. | that manner will the mass support of | jmilitant, elemental, red blooded, the/ the attitude of the legion towards the | THE LEFT WING IN THE Mann declared: “We are out for Levine Flying East. | fields be organized. The Ohio Feder- | pear Ge ce, penctich canmuy potive| werking class, °° GARMENT UNIONS workers’ control; not partially, but} LONDON, Sept. 14.—Charles A.|the workers in and out of the mining p e (a 8 e ense jon. Reaction is rampant in Camden.) “The jegion convention in Paris is | ihe gels an OI ed completely — everywhere, wherever| Levine, trans-Atlantic flyer, an-| ation of Labor, whcih, at its conven- preseals Metopty severe cs an insult to the workers of the world. | WHAT'S WRONG I work is going on.” nounced today that he will begin his | tion in July, went on record in favor ‘i | But it had to at least Be Mena The workers must fight against the | CARPENTER'S UN On the platform, decorated with| eastward flight to India at 6 o’clock | of relief, has done practically nothing.| _Due to the pogrom of the Sigman |about. The officers’ report and Pres-|jegion and defend the memory of | WORLD LABOR UNITY banners in English, Russian and C tomorrow morning. |The miners’ strike is now in its sixth | Clique upon the offices of the Joint |idgnt Quinn spoke of it in terms © | Sacco and Vanzetti.” | By Scott Nearing —10 nese were many leade The start wlil be made from the |month and is reaching the critical | Boards and the Joint Defense Commit-|money contributed and credit for “George 1, Powers, organizer, Iron| minority movement Pollitt, Cranwell Aerodrome. H. G. Hinch-| stage. tee and due to the latest attack of |Strike settlement. No word about the) 14 Bronze Workers Union: “We rec-|||_ DAILY WORKER PUB Wal Hannington, Nat Watkins, Sam | clif¥e, veteran English pilot, will be | Gleveland Geats) these betrayers the Defense commit- | valiant ‘Struggle which these exploit- Gonive that the American Legion COMPANY : Elsbury, I. P. Hughes, W. Stokes, Ar-/ at the controls of Levine’s plane, the| Scabs are being shipped from| tee has had very large expenses. The | ed eae Mee Tne nor Ati | being used as the tool of the bosses | : thur Horner. Angus McDonnell and | monoplane Columbia, in which Levine | Cleveland, but the Workers (Com-|#ffairs arranged by the Committee for | Year, not a syllable about the vitaliza-| .-ainst the workers. That the legion | 33 First Street, New York. Edward Protz came from Anstralia.| and Clarence Chamberlin made the|munist) Party has taken steps to in-|the purpose of raising funds in order | Hon locally and iad of the ef- | attempts to arouse the patriotic feel- —— flight from New York to Germany.*|form the men being shipped of what|to further carry on the struggle were |fort to organize the twenty million’ ino. oy young workers and thereby | Militia to Italian Wreek. Sao fey gies dging not as successful as they should have | UNorganized workers, which Passaic! 316. them break the strikes of their | ROME, Sept. 14—Four persons} SEATTLE, Sept. 14.—Col. Charles| Some banners have been carried by| been, due to the rainy weather at the |™Ust be credited with. fellow workers. were injured to when the Rome-|A. Lindbergh hopped off from Sand|™men in front of the employment time the affairs were held. Except) Spencer Miller of the A. F. of L.| «we call upon all organized work- | derailed while en-] Point Field today for Portland Ore.,|#gencies with the legend: “Don’t scab | this there are thousands of dollars out- Workers’ Educational Bureau also ors to resist the schemes Of force hal > at the small town] where he was expected to arrive about | 1" Pennsylvania.” |standing in tickets. From the Star-|brushed by Bassae hurriedly. )The)traud that the American Legion is| of Marzbetto. All of the injured were | 2 o’clock this afternoon. |_ The District Executive Committee | light Park Jamboree alone there are |little he said was important. trying to put over upon the workan | - | | Milan express w il |has issued an appeal to the workers! over a thousand dollar: h of tick- e P i Siations. ppea. e workers | over a thousand dollars worth of tick The Poor Mill Baron: “The Iron and Bronze Work The cause of the wreck was not as-|_ Broke and unable to pay ferry fare | 2t Ee scab and not to “help the coal ets outstanding. This is the biggest) For him Passaic was too radical, is}union supported the struggle ane \ certained. Police and special militia| and too proud to b&g, Paul Lane, 20, eet a alas J. |S. government |part of the profits: of that éffatr.|siii too radical The mill owners were | thé lives of Seco and Vanzetti. We | units were d to the scene to|Massachusett’s State School “run- | PEa'nSt ine miners. ae appeal has/There are also tickets for previous|not treated right. To give Passaic|are in complete accord with the | maintain order while physicians ex-| away,” went to his death when he bee ee sh ee ect, and a large num- | affairs that weren't paid for as yet.| white blood, to tame it, a Labor Week| French workers in their action | amined the passengers and treated| attempted to swim across the Hudson | > the eee sieldeccont eaeniae eel is very important therefore that/was held in July. Passaic workers | against the lesion ” 8 . i Sia Siver” | ag: , all money due the defense for tickets week ‘ | Se BE ; ee erics. F wees —_. _.... |sonditions, left the employment agen-| should be sent to the office immedi- [Vers %04 for @ week on class collab-| Congratulates French Workers. jey. The result was that today in-| a4) An Sy aute h holdi oration, worker-employer cooperation,| . P, Pascal Cosgrove, organizer, Ho- _ SPEAKERS AT PHILADELPHIA NEGRO LABOR FORUM s*s¢ of stinping 84 men, only 9 went peck tickets or money from the Stan [proguee, more te get more, "This was “and Restaufant Workers union: ; f , |B x “|to fi em: for A. F, . Member-| “I want ratula ‘renc 0 the coal fields ¢ r | light Park Jamboree must realize that | a eer atthe een NOTICE Jamboree Tickets must be turned in at | y 0 ship. This was meant to kill the agi-| worki class the s i ~ i + WARN OF NEW IMPERIALIST WARS NOW BREWING tins conterence nds, {HY ate hindering the work of the tity ant We eet scaugal Se SEL, Working clas on the enlndid opp-ill onee to the Joint Defense || 7 ai a | CHICAGO, IIL, Sept. 14. — The Committee, and are keeping them from | gressivism. vention that it is putting up. We in Committee, 41 Union conference between the Illinois Coal | S*raightening eee ae Europe was an armed camp prepar- Oo hbo eae | member that t settl : perators Association and Dist A ee ee i abor con-| the logion i i i ing for the onslaught of 1914-1916. othe United Bike Whe es ey décount within dhe’ next few days: New Jersey Federation of Labor con | that the legion is an anti-working ; }o Jnited J s ‘ * * vention. No lessons were drawn from | class organization. | Cost of War. ica (Illinois) has broken down com- Did You Find it. It did not become part of any | ‘id You Fin ‘a\\ oom By THOMAS L. DABNEY. PHILADELPHI apt. 14—Speak- ing at the Ame n Negro Labor} Congress Forum, 610 S. 16th St., last | This is all Passaic meant to the America know from bitter experience Square. Do it now. : | coha “pcos cave ‘Hosces eenm |pletaly: THS Diwigiet 12 officiate vere i a Sunday afternoon, Ray Newton, sec- | The spelker gave figures from actually led by International Presi_|2 booklet of the Harlem Credit Union, perspective. However, the rank andl] | «retary of the Peace Section of the | Kirby s book, “War—Its Causes and | gent Lewis, and had his full permis.|in the name of Fannie Magidson? AG Ene has ner aes eke and |j ciety of Friends, str } posed | Cure,” covering the stupendous cost | + é , : po eee celal a . « + {when it does, it will declare Passaic || 3 se eo aged sig rab AGRE Sa Mee Ye aaa atau, oon to conclude a separate agree- | Other documents were also lost which one of labor's monumental aces la i y/; ee Case The Case of Sacco ry argur t of the r s Pea iinaieacaa fied : a ane ee ii ment which would have split the min-| belong to Fannie Magidson and Beck- pep res | * > War is instinctive and hence nec I strated this great cost by stat-| ers’ front very badly. The only hitch|er. This was lost at the picnic, Sun- ; | F- and Vanzetti and unavoidable. Mr. Newton's sub-|ing that a large institution like the | came over the question of terms. Dis-|day Sept. 11 at Pleasant Bay Park. ' neat Becde G1 : ject was “International Anarch | University of California could have | trict President Fishwick offering to | Whoever found it is requested to bring Technical Error In Babes. By Veviux FRANKFURTER Beginning with a brief survey of | been given $6,000,000 every hour, day |send the men back to work with an|it to the office of the Defense, 41} . CLEVELAND, Sept. 13.—Common | ° world conditions, which the speaker|and night for seventy years from | actual eut in wages so long as it did| Union Square, Room 714. ‘ Pleas Judge Carl V. Weygandt today | E - . pointed out, indicate a state of an-|money expended in the World War. | not @ppear as a cut. The Jackson-| The Joint Defense committee here-|W8S to be called on to decide one of | ond 2. f Hocus at the ASS archy between nations, he showed that | This alone indicates the great waste ville seale was to be agreed upon,| by thanks all the comrades who par-|the most difficult and perplexing prob- | dence of the tragic { neither law nor order is foliowed by | involved in war} but what is worse | with supplementary agreements that | ticipated in the work of the Starlight lems that has ever risen in local! case, presented in sim- | the nations of the world in their deal-|as the speaker pointed out, many col-|the men would do more unpaid work | Park Jamboree and at Pleasant Bay | courts. ¥ ple, popular style by a if } “ings with one anojher except in nar- leges and schools are now giving com- and accept other worsening of the| Park Picnic. Special thanks is given|__ On “Aug. 22nd,‘in a local hospital, » vg y ‘ ‘| imits. The wide-spread propa-|pulsory military courses to their stu-| conditions. | However th y : x Smi Co noted lawyer and_pro- ' row limits. The wide-spread propa-|P y military eir st A ‘ e employers |to the “Shashlik’’ boys, the Armenian | Mrs. Sam Smith became a mother. 2. ‘; Pp + ganda of the clique responsible for|dents. This movement for militariz- gt ya ‘ 2 comrades who worked all day prepar- | Hospital attendants told her and her ||) m fessor of Harvard. | (America’s entrance into the World| ing our youth has reached such pro- : inal break; marking the end| ing their national food, Shashlik, for | husband that the baby was a boy, The opponents of La- ‘ War was covered by the speaker, He| portions that in some of the schools|°f present negotiations, came last|the puests at the picnic she related. Sem i f uncovered the hypocrisy, lying, self-| in Dixie it is being given in the eighth | evening when members of the Illinois ® “— : rica Nine days later, when she had re- bor have : bitterly CO U ishness, and dishone involved in| grade! vate rea oa and the | Donations. covered sufficiently to again see the THE DAILY WORKER demned this sane, impar- ‘ % ve : meres mryentsee ri i Seats P 2 mmittee o istri i , . : reer 4 5 et f; 4 this war propaganda, declaring that) The most interesting part of the | (Iiiinois) United Mine Wetec, 12) A young girl worker, who does not |infant—a girl baby was brought. to fg] tial book. It stands as a \ “people are not willing to fight each | ion. Every per-| america, met to hear the report of | Wish her name published, brought in her. She and her husband had by other until their minds are inflamed|son in the audience who participated | the peace committee, composed of two | $10 as a donation for the Defense,|this time decided to name the new F f 4 : ‘ ca. alanee to reaction. ’ ead it. i with hatred and fear thru propagan-|in the discussion added to what the representatives of each camp | This money she intended spending at| arrival “George.” Hospital authori- ; da, | speaker had said by showing the role| “George P, Barrington, operator and Camp Nitgédeiget. ties admit that they made a “technical end vanvettl tie ‘caredeme tat $1.00 cloth-bound. Armament Race. of the imperialist government of the spokesman for the committée een pee * * * error.” Ellis appearing in the DAILY The Speaker empha d the fact| United States in disseminating cheap ed that the peace body edd ABE $200 Donation From Baltimore. SHG EE Tone attention tired + ty bi that the last war fought ostensibly | and vile propaganda to support its agree, The Baltimore branch of the Joint Steamer In Danger. inspired drawings were, (ee. to end war and to, make the world unconstitutional war against China;| ‘The ultimatum of the operators was | Defense collected $200 at a picnic held| HALIFAX, N. S., Sept. 14.-An un- Be an wigrine eho, countey: The Sacco-Vanzetti safe for democracy, has, instead of | Nicaragua, Haiti and other nations. the “mailed fist without the velvet | forthe bengfit of the cloakmakers and | identified steamer in distress» was one large (9x12) book they Antholo: of Ve bi accomplishing this lofty purpose, re-| Because of the interest which is now | glove,” officials said for the opera- | furriers, sighted in Jatitude 41.83 North, longi- Kleeb per apy sy td ek By nee sulted. in crushing every vestige of being exhibited in the forum, it is | tors demanded as a basis for negotia- | ¢ x * tude 63.30 West, the French steamer 8 Who gave thelr lite A collection of inspiring democracy and in accelerating the mad |expected that a larger audience will| tions the surrender of the miners’ | Collection At House Party. Coeur D’Alene reported by wireless Lh 2ogOne 25 poetry on ie case by seven- tace of armaments among the nations |be present next Sunday when “What| wage scale, and the miners had of-| Dave Lazaroff of the Bronx, sent| today. The steamer had a black hull ee teen noted poets, of the world. Quoting Kirby Page, |is the Solution of the Negro Prob-|fered “peace with honor to both $4, which he collected at a house party | and a yellow funnel the message said. DAILY WORKER ‘PUB. co. / an authority on the last war, the|lem?” will be discussed by Julian St. | sides.” ‘of a friend. bili iil 83 First Street, New York 25 CENTS _. speaker said that more men were |G. White, A. J. Carey and T. L. Dab- “ _—___—_——- | ner anne BUY THE DAILY WORKER : "under arms in 1923 than in 1913 when 'ney. é Keep Up the Sustaining Fund| Keep Up the Sustaining Fund) AT THE NEWSSTANDS we ut “a a ) ee a OE: @ ss